Codes for the nuetrons in a basis of natural science when given a double helix structure follwed by a codon enzyme
Ribosomes and tRNA molecules help a cell translate an mRNA message into a polypeptide.
mRNA carries the genetic code to a ribosome.
In any cell, Ribosomes translate mRNA and make proteins.
Genes are transcribed into messenger RNA (mRNA) as part of the process of protein synthesis. The mRNA contains the genetic information from the DNA that is needed to produce proteins. This mRNA then serves as a template for the ribosomes to translate the genetic code into a sequence of amino acids, which ultimately form a protein.
It will use adenine, but thymine will be replaced by a nitrogen base called "uracil" in mRNA
During the process of protein synthesis, ribosomes bind to the mRNA to read and translate the genetic code into a protein.
Ribosomes translate mRNA into proteins.
Ribosomes and tRNA molecules help a cell translate an mRNA message into a polypeptide.
To determine the amino acid sequence from mRNA, one can use the genetic code to translate the sequence of nucleotides in the mRNA into a sequence of amino acids. Each set of three nucleotides, called a codon, corresponds to a specific amino acid. By reading the mRNA sequence in groups of three nucleotides and matching them to the genetic code, one can determine the corresponding amino acid sequence.
mRNA gets its code from DNA during process "Transcription".
RNA assists in protein synthesis and translating the genetic code. DNA unzips to form a single-strand RNA and free nucleotides pair with the unzipped bases. In RNA, the thyamine is replaced with uracil. Adenine and uracil always combine. mRNA carries the genetic code for protein. mRNA travels through the nuclear membrane to cytoplasm and attaches to a ribosome which decodes the message. Ribosomes translate the mRNA code and builds the protein with amino acids.
mRNA carries the genetic code to a ribosome.
mRNA uses uracil in its genetic code, not thymine.
Yes, mRNA uses uracil in its genetic code instead of thymine.
That question doesn't make sense. mRNA is created by transcription (i.e. DNA code to RNA code) and the mRNA is translated to proteins
mRNA
mRNA